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Period 6 Review Diamond, Andrey Kostadinov, and Joshua Epley.

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Presentation on theme: "Period 6 Review Diamond, Andrey Kostadinov, and Joshua Epley."— Presentation transcript:

1 Period 6 Review Diamond, Andrey Kostadinov, and Joshua Epley

2 The Rise of Industrial America By 1900, the United States was the leading industrial power in the world, manufacturing more than Great Britain, France, and Germany. This was the cause of several factors: o The country was home to many, unharvested raw materials (Coal, Iron, Copper, etc.) o An abundant labor supply of Americans and immigrants. o A growing population and an advanced transportation network. o A plentiful capital that was further increased by wealthy, European investors. o The development of labor saving technologies and an efficient patent system, granting more than 440,000 patents from 1860 to 1890. o Businesses benefited greatly from friendly government policies. o Many talented entrepreneurs emerged during this era who built and managed vast industrial and commercial enterprises.

3 The Business of Railroads Eastern Trunk Lines: o Between 1830-1860, the railroad system was inefficient, consisting of many local lines that had different distance between tracks and incompatible equipment. o The Civil War partially helped to fix the problem by adding trunk lines which connected the scattered rails to main cities, but many of the problems still remained. o Cornelius Vanderbilt, a wealthy steamboat businessmen, merged many local railroads into the New York Central Railroad (1867). - connecting New York City and Chicago; operating more than 4,500 miles of track o Other trunk lines, such as the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and the Pennsylvania Railroad, connected eastern coasts with Chicago and other mid-western cities. o This set the standards of excellence and efficiency for the rest of the industry.

4 The Business of Railroads Western Railroads: o The government began to give out Federal Land Grants recognizing that railroads would lead the way to settlement in the West. o The government gave 80 railroad companies more than 170 million acres of public land. o However, the land grants and loans promoted hasty and poor construction and led to corruption in all levels of government. o Construction companies were used to bribe government officials and pocket huge profits, like the notorious Crédit Mobilier.

5 The Business of Railroads The Transcontinental Railroad: The Union Pacific Company (UP): o Started from Omaha, Nebraska and built westward across the Great Plains. o The UP employed thousands of war veterans and Irish immigrants. The Central Pacific Company: o Started from Sacramento, California and built Eastward. o The Central Pacific company employed 6,000 Chinese immigrants. The two railways came together on May 10, 1869 at Promontory Point, Utah, linking the Atlantic and Pacific states. In 1883, three other transcontinental railroads were completed: - The Southern Pacific, The Northern Pacific, Great Northern Though all of these railroads were helpful in settling the West, they were built in areas with little promise of returning a profit quickly.

6 The Business of Railroads Competition and Consolidation: o Due to speculative bubbles in the 1870s and 1880s, railroads suffered from mismanagement and outright fraud. o Railroads attempted to survive by offering discounts to favored shippers while charging exorbitant rates to farmers. They also formed forming pools in which competing companies agreed to fix rates and share traffic. o A financial panic in 1893 forced a quarter of all railroads into bankruptcy. o J. Pierpont Morgan quickly bought a large sum of the railroads. In doing so, he dominated the boards of competing railroad corporations through interlocking directorates, creating regional railroad monopolies. o The government attempted to pass laws to regulate the railroads but they did little good. The Granger laws were overturned by the courts and the federal Interstate Commerce Act of 1886 was ineffective.

7 Industrial Empires “A Second Industrial Revolution”: o The late 19 th century had major enlargements in industrial production and capability. - A majority of the industrial hotspots were in the northeast. o A second Industrial Revolution resulted in the growth of large-scale industry, steel production, petroleum, electric power, and the industrial machinery to produce other goods.

8 Industrial Empires The Steel Industry: o The Bessemer press allowed for the production of steel which was more durable than iron. o Andrew Carnegie was the entrepreneur who led the fast-growing steel industry. Carnegie was an immigrant from Scotland who worked his way up from poverty to start the biggest steel manufacturer in the world in Pittsburg. o Carnegie practiced vertical integration, by which a company would control every stage of the industrial process. o Carnegie eventually sold his company to the U.S. Steel Corporation, led by J.P. Morgan, to devote himself to philanthropy. The U.S. Steel Corporation was the first billion-dollar company and also the largest enterprise in the world. It controlled more than three-fifths of the nation’s steel business.

9 Industrial Empires Rockefeller and the Oil Industry: o The first U.S. oil well was drilled in 1859 in Pennsylvania. o John D. Rockefeller founded a company in 1863 that would control most of the nations oil refineries by eliminating its competition. Cutting prices for Standard Oil kerosene forced his rival companies to sell out. - By 1881, the Standard Oil Trust controlled 90% of the oil refinery business. o Rockefeller practiced horizontal integration, by which a company bought out former competitors. o The Standard Oil Trust was one of the cheapest products produced in the United States. Soon, other companies began to created organized trusts of their own (Sugar, Tobacco, Leather, Meat).

10 Industrial Empires Antitrust Movement: o The trusts came under widespread scrutiny and attack in the1880s. o Middle class citizens feared the trusts’ unchecked power, and the urban elites resented the new rich. o The Congress passed the Sherman Antitrust Act (1890) which prohibited any “contract, combination, in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce.” o However, because of its vagueness, it failed to stop the development of trusts. o To make matters worse, the Supreme Court ruled that the Sherman Antitrust Act could be applied only to commerce, not to manufacturing (United States v. E. C. Knight Co. (1895)).

11 Laissez-Faire Capitalism The government did nothing to regulate the prevailing economic, scientific, and religious beliefs of the late 19 th century. The economic expression of these beliefs was summed up in the phrase “laissez- faire.”

12 Laissez-Faire Capitalism Conservative Economic Theories: o Economist Adam Smith argued in 1776 in his book, The Wealth of Nations, that business should be regulated, not by government, but by the “invisible hand” – the law of supply and demand. o American industrialists appealed to laissez-faire theory to justify their methods of doing business, but they hypocritically accepted the protection of high tariffs and federal subsidies. o The rise of monopolies and trusts undercut the competition needed for natural regulation, but the government did nothing because of laissez-faire.

13 Laissez-Faire Capitalism Social Darwinism: o Social Darwinism was the belief that Darwin’s ideas of natural selection and survival of the fittest should be applied to the market place. o It was argued that helping the poor was misguided because it would only weaken the evolution of species. o Race theories about the superiority of one group over others continued to produce problems because of Social Darwinism. Gospel of Wealth: o People found that religion was more convincing than Social Darwinism in justifying the wealth of others. o Andrew Carnegie’s article “Wealth” argued that the wealthy had a God-given responsibility to carry out acts of philanthropy for the benefit of society.

14 Technology and Innovations Inventions:


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